Bristol Culture is now a website. Please visit www.bristol-culture.com for all the same content that we have been writing over the last four years, from theatre to cafes to news to features, but in a shiny new format with some fantastic new features which will hopefully make the site much easier to navigate.

All of the content that has been built up over the last four years has been transferred over to the new site, and the content produced will also remain much the same. Just think a few more jazz hands.

We really hope you like the new look. If you want to get in touch, please email martin@bristol-culture.com or tweet @bristol_culture.

New street art by Philth has appeared in one of the most prominent graffiti spots in Bristol, underneath Banksy’s hanging man mural on Trenchard Street, best viewed from the bridge above on Park Street. Philth’s work is to accompany his new solo show at the nearby Weapon of Choice Gallery, where he has also painted a piece next to the front door…

You have to look quite carefully to find them both, but there are now two food options at Temple Meads that are among the best in Bristol at what they provide. The trailblazer was Hart’s Bakery beneath the arches on the approach to the station, which people now travel from miles around to visit as well as being positioned ideally for a pit-stop before a long train journey.

When I spoke to Laura Hart last year before her new bakery opened, she described Temple Meads as “a food wasteland”. That has certainly now changed, however, thanks in no small part to her arrival and now due to another arrival, Chomp, which on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Saturdays is located by the side entrance to the station serving food to get meat-eaters salivating.

Chomp operate out of an old Citroen horse van imported from France. Owner Jake – the self-styled “Chief of Beef” – has done a hugely impressive job restoring the van, which was causing many passers-by to stop in their tracks when I visited yesterday.

Morning service from 7.30ish sees bacon butties served to hungry commuters, then lunch sees a daily-changing offering which yesterday was the black and blue burger (£5) with Stilton and mushrooms, a steak sandwich (£5) and chilli beef sandwich (£3.50).

My black and blue burger was terrific, served with bacon, beef from Hereford cattle farmed in the West Country and dry-aged for around 25 days, and a slightly toasted bun branded with the Chomp logo. Although it was a shame that soon after 1pm they had run out of mushrooms.

Chomp have recently organised two weekend pop-ups at 40 Alfred Place in Kingsdown with the Wiper & True brewery – two of Bristol’s finest and most ambitious food and drink businesses joining forces – and have future plans including more pop-ups and other events.

There is no longer any excuse to buy an overpriced sandwich from WH Smith in the station entrance. Temple Meads is no longer a food wasteland.

We love a good riot in Bristol. When Margaret Thatcher died, we rioted. When a Tesco wanted to open in Stokes Croft, we rioted. Further back in time in 1793, when tolls were reintroduced on Bristol Bridge, we rioted. That riot culminated in a massacre as the militia were called in and 14 rioters killed.

Riot! by Michael Manson is a reissued version of a book originally published in 1997 which details the characters involved the build-up to the riot and the lack of a proper enquiry afterwards.

Manson said: “While Bristolians are flocking to the cinema to see Les Miserables based around the massacre on the barricades in Paris few realise that there were similar events in Bristol.

“Young people who had been drinking in the ale houses protested against the authorities with fatal consequences. It is a fascinating episode in the city’s history that we felt deserved to be brought to a wider audience.”

Riot! is published by Bristol Books, a community interest company who publish important and untold stories about lives, communities, places and events that have significance and interest in Bristol and the surrounding area.

The book will be launched upstairs at Renato’s Restaurant, King Street at 6pm on Thursday, April 25. Manson will read an extract from Riot! and will be signing copies, while Steve Poole, Associate Professor of Social and Cultural History at UWE, will outline the significance of the events covered in the book.

Airborne divas, Tina Turner wigs with a mind of their own and the biggest technicolour flares you’ll ever see. Priscilla, Queen of the Desert makes no secret of what it will deliver in terms of spectacle; plunging the audience straight in at the deep end with an all-singing, all-dancing rendition of It’s Raining Men…

There always seemed to be something of a missed opportunity at the Alma Tavern. It was a Clifton hostelry better known for having a theatre above it than for being a pub. With the help of a lick of paint, that opportunity has now been grasped and the Alma Tavern is slowly becoming known for its food and drink as well as its upstairs theatre.

Pub touches remain. There is a quiz here every Monday. The area at the far end of the bar remains resolutely unchanged other than regularly changing artwork on the walls. There is a piano. And the beer garden only has a few new pieces of furniture.

The real change has come at the front of the pub, with tables laid, tablecloths pressed and wine glasses shining. New head chef Gary Crossan has come up with four distinct menus: bar, lunch, dinner and Sunday lunch.

All mains on the bar menu cost £9.50 and range from the Alma burger (chorizo, Applewood smoked cheddar, beef tomato, baby gem and chunky chips), to “sausages of the moment” with mash, buttered greens and rosemary gravy.

A lunch time special sees one course for £8, two for £10 and three for £12, but it’s in the evening when the stars of the show appear, including Ashton Court venison steak, truffle dauphinoise potato, celeriac puree and port jus (£14), and pan-fried sea bass served with champ potato, braised chicory, rosemary and orange butter and fennel seed beignet (£13).